The ongoing global pandemic, now approaching its third year, has profoundly illustrated the critical role of the internet in society, changing the way we work, live, play, and learn. This role will continue to expand as digital transformation becomes even more pervasive. However, connecting more users, devices, applications, content, and data with one another is only one dimension to this expansion.
Another is the new and emerging types of digital experiences such as cloud gaming, augmented reality/virtual reality (AR/VR), telesurgery using robotic assistance, autonomous vehicles, intelligent kiosks, and Internet of Things (IoT)-based smart cities/communities/homes. These emerging digital experiences are more interactive, bandwidth-hungry, latency-sensitive, and they generate massive amounts of data useful for valuable analytics. Hence, the performance of public and private networks will be progressively important for delivering superior digital experiences.
Network performance, however, is increasingly dependent on the complex internet topology that's evolving from a network of networks to a network of data centers. Data centers are generally where applications, content, and data are hosted as workloads using compute, storage, and networking infrastructure. Data centers may be deployed on private premises, at colocation facilities, in the public cloud, or in a virtual private cloud and each may connect to the public internet, a private network, or both. Regardless, service providers, including but not limited to communication service providers (CSPs) that provide network connectivity services, carrier neutral providers that offer colocation/data center services, cloud providers that deliver cloud services, content providers that supply content distribution services, and software-as-a-service (SaaS) application providers all play a vital role in both digital experiences and network performance. However, each service provider can only control the performance of its own network and associated on-net infrastructure and not anything outside of its network infrastructure (i.e., off-net). For this reason, cloud providers offer dedicated network interconnects so their customers can bypass the internet and receive superior network performance for cloud services.
In the past, service providers commonly deployed a relatively small number of large data centers and network interconnects at centralized locations. In other words, that's one large-scale data center (with optional redundant infrastructure) per geographic region where all applicable traffic within the region would backhaul to. New and emerging digital experiences, however, as referenced above, are stressing these centralized data center and interconnect architectures given their much tighter performance requirements. At the most fundamental level, the speed of light determines how quickly traffic can traverse a network while computational power defines how fast applications and associated data can be processed. Therefore, proximity of data center workloads to users and devices where the data is generated and/or consumed is a gating factor for high quality service delivery of these emerging digital experiences.
Consider the following:
These are just a few examples that illustrate the increasing importance of proximity between applications, content, and data hosted in data centers with users/devices. They also illustrate how the delivery of new and emerging digital experiences will be dependent on the highest levels of network performance. Therefore, to satisfy these emerging network requirements and deliver superior digital experiences to customers, service providers should transform their data center and interconnect architectures from a centralized model to a highly distributed model (i.e., edge compute/edge cloud) where data center infrastructure and interconnects are deployed at all layers of the service provider network (e.g., local access, regional, national, global) and with close proximity to users/devices where the data is generated and/or consumed.
This transformation should also include the ubiquitous use of a programmable network that allows the service provider to intelligently place workloads across its distributed data center infrastructure as well as intelligently route traffic based upon service/application needs (e.g., to/from the optimal data center), a technique we refer to as intent-based networking. Further, in addition to being highly distributed, edge data centers should be heterogeneous and not one specific form factor. Rather, different categories of edge data centers should exist and be optimized for different types of services and use cases.
Cisco, for example, identifies four main categories of edge data centers for edge compute services:
Of course, applicability of these different categories of edge compute services will vary per service provider based on the specific types of services and use cases each intends to offer. Carriers/CSPs, for example, are in a unique position because they own the physical edge of the network and are on the path between the clouds, colocation/data centers, and users/devices. Of course, cloud providers and content providers are also in a unique position to bring high performance edge compute and storage closer to users/devices whether via expanding their locations and/or hosting directly on the customer's premises. Similarly, carrier neutral providers (e.g., co-location/data centers) are also in a unique position given their dense interconnection of CSPs, cloud providers, content providers, and SaaS application providers.
Figure 1. Distributed data centers and edge servicesService providers that deploy a highly distributed data center and interconnect architecture will benefit from:
Some CSPs are already actively moving in this direction on their own or in partnership with cloud and content providers. Service providers that haven't started their transformation toward a highly distributed edge data center and interconnect architecture need to be aware that competitors intend to fill the void. To deliver superior network performance for the emerging digital experiences, service providers should start this transformation now.
Take a few minutes to better understand the Cisco data center and edge computing solutions, and also take a closer look at our Edge Cloud for Content Delivery solution that has resulted from our partnership with Qwilt. This is one blog within a series of Cisco SP360 blogs entitled "Perspectives on the Future of Service Provider Networking". Check out the full series of blogs.